Abstract

Single-atom catalysts have received significant attention for their ability to enable highly selective reactions. However, many reactions require more than one adjacent site to align reactants or break specific bonds. For example, breaking a C-O or O-H bond may be facilitated by a dual site containing an oxophilic element and a carbophilic or "hydrogenphilic" element that binds each molecular fragment. However, design of stable and well-defined dual-atom sites with desirable reactivity is difficult due to the complexity of multicomponent catalytic surfaces. Here, we describe a new type of dual-atom system, trimetallic dual-atom alloys, which were designed via computation of the alloying energetics. Through a broad computational screening we discovered that Pt-Cr dimers embedded in Ag(111) can be formed by virtue of the negative mixing enthalpy of Pt and Cr in Ag and the favorable interaction between Pt and Cr. These dual-atom alloy sites were then realized experimentally through surface science experiments that enabled the active sites to be imaged and their reactivity related to their atomic-scale structure. Specifically, Pt-Cr sites in Ag(111) can convert ethanol, whereas PtAg and CrAg are unreactive toward ethanol. Calculations show that the oxophilic Cr atom and the hydrogenphilic Pt atom act synergistically to break the O-H bond. Furthermore, ensembles with more than one Cr atom, present at higher dopant loadings, produce ethylene. Our calculations have identified many other thermodynamically favorable dual-atom alloy sites, and hence this work highlights a new class of materials that should offer new and useful chemical reactivity beyond the single-atom paradigm.

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